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@article{ Wainwright2005,
 title = {Fractured identities: injury and the balletic body},
 author = {Wainwright, Steven P. and Williams, Clare and Turner, Bryan S.},
 journal = {Health},
 number = {1},
 pages = {49-66},
 volume = {9},
 year = {2005},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/1363459305048097},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-225853},
 abstract = {Social worlds shape human bodies and so it is inevitable that there are strong                relationships between the body, professional dance and identity. In this article we                draw on Bourdieu’s notions of habitus, and various forms of capital, as                the main theoretical framework for our discussion. Our ethnography of the balletic                body elicited dancers and ex-dancers’ perceptions of their bodies and                sought to reveal some of the facets of their embodied habitus. The sheer physicality                of their working lives - of feeling exhausted, sweaty and out of breath - is                something dancers (like all athletes) become ‘addicted to’.                Ageing and injury can reveal this compulsion to dance and so dancers invariably find                it very difficult to, for example, give up class once they retire from the stage; or                miss a performance if they have a ‘slight injury’. In other                words, the vocational calling to dance is so overwhelming that their balletic body                is their identity. In addition, there is an unremitting loop between individual                habitus and institutional habitus (the ballet company), which affects both the                meaning and management of injury. All our informants at the Royal Ballet (London:                n = 20) had suffered dance injuries. The injured, dancing body is perceived                as an inevitable part of a career in ballet. Everyone spoke of the improved                athleticism of dancers, and of the expansion in facilities to maintain healthy                dancers. However, most dancers can expect several major injuries during their                careers. Such epiphanies force dancers to confront their embodiment, and their                thoughts invariably turn to their body, career and self. Critical injuries threaten                to terminate a dancer’s career and so endanger their embodied sense of                self. On a more everyday level, dancing and performing with painful, niggling                injuries is the norm.},
}